Building on our previous efforts to generate thermostable chimeric fungal cellobiohydrolase I (CBH I, also known as Cel7A) cellulases by structure-guided recombination, we used FoldX and a 'consensus' sequence approach to identify individual mutations present in the five homologous parent CBH I enzymes which further stabilize the chimeras. Using the FoldX force field, we calculated the effect on ΔGFolding of each candidate mutation in a number of CBH I structures and chose those predicted to be stabilizing in multiple structures. With an alignment of 41 CBH I sequences, we also used amino acid frequencies at each candidate position to calculate predicted effects on ΔGFolding. A combination of mutations chosen using these methods increased the T50 of the most thermostable chimera by an additional 4.7°C, to yield a CBH I with T50 of 72.1°C, which is 9.2°C higher than that of the most stable native CBH I, from Talaromyces emersonii. This increased stability resulted in a 10°C increase in the optimal temperature for activity, to 65°C, and a 50 increase in total sugar production from crystalline cellulose at the optimal temperature, compared with native T.emersonii CBH I. © 2012 The Authors.
CITATION STYLE
Komor, R. S., Romero, P. A., Xie, C. B., & Arnold, F. H. (2012). Highly thermostable fungal cellobiohydrolase i (Cel7A) engineered using predictive methods. Protein Engineering, Design and Selection, 25(12), 827–833. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzs058
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